Q
What does the following JavaScript code snippet do? Code: let result = x > 0 ? 'Positive' : (x < 0 ? 'Negative' : 'Zero');

Answer & Solution

Answer: Option A
Solution:
The statement uses nested ternary conditional operators (? :) to assign different values to result based on the value of x. If x is greater than 0, it assigns 'Positive' to result. If x is less than 0, it assigns 'Negative' to result. Otherwise, it assigns 'Zero' to result. This allows for conditional assignment of values based on multiple conditions in a single statement.
Related Questions on Average

Which of the following JavaScript statements is used to execute a block of code repeatedly until a specified condition becomes false?

A). Function declaration statement

B). Conditional statement (if statement)

C). Assignment statement

D). Looping statement (do-while loop)

What will be the output of the following JavaScript code? Code: for (let i = 0; i <= 3; i++) { console.log(i); }

A). 0 1 2 3

B). 0 1 2

C). 1 2 3

D). 1 2 3 4

What will be the output of the following JavaScript code? Code: let x = 10; while (x > 0) { console.log(x); x -= 2; }

A). 10 8 6 4 2 0

B). 10 8 6 4 2

C). 8 6 4 2 0

D). 9 7 5 3 1 -1

What is the purpose of the following JavaScript statement? let result = x > 0 ? 'Positive' : 'Non-positive';

A). Assigns the value 'Positive' to result if x is greater than 0, otherwise assigns 'Non-positive'

B). Checks if x is greater than 0

C). Prints 'Positive' if x is greater than 0, otherwise prints 'Non-positive'

D). None of the above

What will be the output of the following JavaScript code? Code: let i = 3; do { console.log(i); i--; } while (i > 0);

A). 3 2 1

B). 2 1 0

C). 3 2 1 0

D). 1 2 3

What will be the output of the following JavaScript code? Code: let x = 15; if (x > 10) { console.log('x is greater than 10'); } else { console.log('x is not greater than 10'); }

A). x is greater than 10

B). x is not greater than 10

C). Undefined

D). Error

What does the following JavaScript code snippet do? Code: let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; for (let i = 0; i < numbers.length; i++) { console.log(numbers[i]); }

A). Prints all elements of the array numbers

B). Calculates the sum of elements in the array numbers

C). Finds the maximum element in the array numbers

D). Checks if all elements in the array numbers are even

What will be the output of the following JavaScript code? Code: let x = 7; if (x % 2 === 0) { console.log('Even'); } else { console.log('Odd'); }

A). Even

B). Odd

C). 7

D). None of the above

What does the following JavaScript code snippet do? Code: let numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; let sum = 0; for (let num of numbers) { sum += num; } console.log(sum);

A). Finds the maximum number in the array numbers

B). Calculates the average of numbers in the array numbers

C). Sums all numbers in the array numbers

D). Checks if all numbers in the array numbers are even

What is the purpose of the following JavaScript statement? return result;

A). Exits the current loop or switch statement

B). Skips the current iteration in a loop

C). Exits the current function and returns a value

D). Continues to the next iteration in a loop